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If you follow wellness trends, chances are you’ve seen “therapeutic laziness” making the rounds on social media. But what’s ...
Oxford dictionary reveals ‘lazy’ 2022 word of the year By Fox News Published Dec. 5, 2022, 3:48 p.m. ET ...
The slang term means "behavior which is unapologetically self-indulgent, lazy, slovenly, or greedy, typically in a way that rejects social norms." It was the landslide pick in a public vote.
Lazy: not liking or willing to act or work. I can readily think of times where I have been a lazy pilot in a more traditional sense of the word, and it was not a great look.
Unpacking the myth of laziness, the reality of neurodivergent struggles, and how to work with your brain—not against it.
The word ‘laziness’ arose in the sixteenth century; older terms for germane notions are indolence and sloth. Indolence derives from the Latin indolentia, ‘without pain’.
It more suggests sorrow than anger on the part of the speaker. The word dates from the 18th century and has either Scottish or Germanic roots. “Gaumless” is the older spelling.